This post will share an easy homemade applesauce recipe that you can preserve in jars with the traditional water bath instructions OR the steam canning directions. I’ll also share my favorite jars for lunch box size portions of this healthy snack!
This post contains affiliate links. That means that if you click on a link and make a purchase, I get a tiny commission. That link doesn’t affect your purchase price at all, and I wouldn’t link to products that I wouldn’t recommend to my best friends. Click through and get those tiny jars I recommend; you’ll love them!
My daughter started kindergarten this year and about six months ago she had a terrible bout of dental cavities that meant that 1) she got her father’s teeth (I have ZERO cavities) and 2) I began my process to find foods that were not the normal highly processed lunch box fare like Goldfish crackers and graham crackers. Those fine flours stick in the crevices of little teeth and cause more carries so those items are never making it into my shopping cart, not even in a rush or special occasion.
Homemade applesauce is something that is easy to make, fast (only 10 minutes in the canning process and there’s an easy trick to skipping peeling and coring I’ll explain in a moment) and you can skip the sugar entirely especially if you have sweet apples on hand.
Everyone always asks at this part of my applesauce story if the jar is hard to open for a kindergardener. The answer is that I crack the seal the night before when I put her lunch together, screw the ring back on, and put it in her backpack. She’s had no trouble– but she has had to ask for help opening her string cheese, tying her shoe, and remembering her jacket. The jars are easy 🙂
It bears mentioning that canning jar glass is really sturdy, free from BPA, and the small jars especially tend to hold up really well. The only jars I ever break are the big ones 🙂
Download the PDF of the applesauce recipe with steam canning AND water bath directions for free here!
Gather your canning equipment, if you plan to can it (I promise its such a quick step) and you can grab my canning equipment checklists right here!
Jars that are perfect for applesauce:
Okay, so my mother would have never canned these tiny jars because in her mind, it might have taken longer. I’m not my mother 😉 This step of canning in smaller jars saves me SO much time when I’m really rushed packing lunch that it is TOTALLY worth it.
I canned in these half-pint jars, which are 8 ounces, and my kindergartener can eat one easily if she’s hungry.
I also canned in these little 4 ounce jars which I love for when I have a variety of things in the lunchbox and the applesauce isn’t a main part of the meal.
Here’s how you skip peeling and coring the apples. Chop them, remove worms or bad spots, and cook until soft as the directions explain. Use this food mill (my all time favorite tool) to puree them. The mill keeps the skins and seeds and cores up top in the hopper and the sauce just falls through in minutes below. They are super easy to use and clean and are a fun way to include kids in the process. I love love love the food mill.
Here’s how to make healthy homemade applesauce
You will need
8 cups apples, washed and chopped, stems, cores, and seeds may remain
water to cover- at least 8 cups
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons real maple syrup
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 teaspoon cinnamon
**for baby food, omit all but apples and water and use 4-ounce jelly jars.
1. Prepare your water bath canning pot or your steam canner. Fill the water bath canning pot with water, add 8 half pints (1 measuring cup total) jars, and bring to a boil OR fill the steam canner to fill line and turn on low with 10-11 pint jars nearby on a towel-covered countertop.
2. Combine apples and water and simmer together in a preserving pan (a heavy-bottomed, wide pan) and stir occasionally for 30 minutes or until apples are very soft.
3. Puree: Remove from heat and ladle into a food mill. OR apples could be peeled and cored prior, and mashed with a potato masher.
4. Return apples to a boil, add sugar, maple syrup, vanilla, and cinnamon.
Cook for 5 minutes.
5. Ladle into jars one at a time, apply lids and rings, and either submerge into the boiling water of the boiling water bath with a jar lifter OR set gently on the rack of the steam canner.
6. Process for 10 minutes PLUS 5 minutes for every 1000 ft above sea level. Remove from heat, rest jars carefully on a towel-covered countertop. Label cooled jars and store for up to 1 year.
Yields about 10 cups of applesauce.
Download the free recipe PDF here!
This little recipe has been so valuable- now, I have a healthy, homemade go-to for lunches that won’t get stuck in her teeth and cause dreaded cavities.
I wrote a blog post last week about the 5 Recipes Perfect for Kids and I think you’ll love it.
Head over to read it, or grab the 5 Recipes PDF here!
Erin M. says
I love to can with my mom and sister. Thanks for sharing this delicious recipe!
Jenny Gomes says
Erin, I’m so glad you do! It’s that sentiment exactly that makes me think you’d love my sister site, http://www.loveintojars.com – check it out!
Scott says
My great aunt in Vermont used to make homemade applesauce every year – I always looked forward to it. Looks like it’s time I made some of my own! Great post! Thanks!
Jenny Gomes says
Oh thank you, Scott! It IS time you made your own; it’s easy and delicious:)
Wanda Tracey says
I love canning.It saves me a lot of money and my family loves apple sauce.Thanks for the great recipe to try. I pinned the contest: https://www.pinterest.ca/pin/332984966191501363/ 🙂
Jenny Gomes says
Oh I’m so happy to hear all of this Wanda!
Lara says
I love that you’re explaining everything! I love canning so I love this! 🙂
Jenny Gomes says
I’m so glad you enjoyed it, Lara!
Nicole says
Sounds easy enough and ? delicious.Thsnks for sharing!
Jenny Gomes says
Nicole, it really is easy! I can’t wait to hear how it goes!
Kathy says
You could make the recipe even more easy. I use a variety of apples, and use the core and cut into wedge “tool”. It removes the core and cuts into equal sections with a push, I then use filtered water, just to keep the apples from burning. Cook the apples till tender and then I process in my VitaMix..pureeing until the consistency I want my applesauce. If I want any sweetness I use raw cane sugar..otherwise I leave out the sugar…..it makes the best “natural” applesauce and you get the benefit of adding the peels.
Since apples have natural pectin, used in jams and jellies, I think using the peels also adds a thickness to natural applesauce. Also the added vitamins from the peels.
Jenny Gomes says
Thanks for the different method suggestions Kathy! I don’t prefer the wedge tool nor do I like using a blender but I’m glad they work for you! I’ve found that those steps add time, rather than subtract, but again, I’m glad that works for you!
Lisa Blakeney says
A lot of your recipes seem to have high sugar content. Is it possible to make applesauce and other things without so much sugar?
Jenny Gomes says
You are right Lisa. Sugar is a powerful preservative and canning recipes aren’t ones where you should change the sugar ratio. Applesauce can be made without any added sugar (in the directions I say you can skip all ingredients other than the apples an water) but for jam, you need the sugar. I hope that helps.